Sheepshead
Archosargus probatocephalus
Sheepshead (Archosargus probatocephalus) is a coastal sparid found around jetties, bridges, oyster bars, piers, and mangrove edges. Its human-like teeth and strong jaws let it crush barnacles, oysters, and crabs, making it a difficult but popular inshore target.

识别要点
- Distinct black vertical bars on a silvery-gray body
- Prominent human-like incisor teeth in front with molar-like crushers behind
- Deep, oval body with spiny dorsal fin and little to no elongated fins
栖息地
Shallow coastal waters over hard structure: jetties, bridge pilings, docks, rock piles, oyster reefs, and mangrove roots; often enters brackish estuaries and bays, especially where barnacles and shellfish are abundant.
饵料备注
Best baits are live or fresh fiddler crabs, mud crabs, sand fleas, oysters, clams, and small shrimp. Small pieces of peeled shrimp or fiddler-crab chunks on short-shank hooks work well; small crab-imitating jigs can also produce bites.
行为
Feeds by picking crustaceans, mollusks, and other hard-shelled prey off structure, often very carefully before making a short strong run. Most active around moving tide and cooler months in many areas; can be notoriously bite-slight and bait-stealing.
注意事项
Strong pharyngeal teeth can crush shellfish but do not pose a handling hazard like sharp teeth; use care around hooks and structure. Local size and bag limits are common, and oysters/crabs taken from polluted waters can carry contamination risk if harvested for bait or consumption.
钓法备注
Fish tight to structure with light-to-medium tackle and small hooks, using enough weight to hold bottom in current. Set the hook only after a clean, steady bite; many anglers wait for the line to move with the fish because sheepshead often mouth bait delicately.